The Final Solution
The Jewish question had been a topic that Hitler strived to find an answer to. He had a strong hate for Jews and wanted nothing but to vanish them from Germany. His answer to this question, the final solution, was a Nazi plan to exterminate all Jews. The book Night written by holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, the book Herman Goring: Hitler's Second-in-Command, written by Fred Ramen, and the journal article "Hitler's Role in the Final Solution", by Ian Kershaw, all provide an inside look on the final solution from both the oppressors and the oppressed. The final solution brought forth violence, cruelty, and split several Jewish families apart.
In the story Night, Elie, the author, and his family are evacuated
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Herman Goring was a lieutenant in the German Army in WWI, and later became a pilot. Goring had been Adolf Hitler's second-in-command since his early political days. Hitler put Goring in charge of forming the German Luftwaffe, SS, secret police forces, and ordered for concentration camps to be built. By 1942 Goring's relationship with Hitler began to vanish because of Hitler blaming him for military failures. In 1945 Goring abandoned Hitler, who made it obvious he would die in his bunker rather than watch Germany fall, and assumed that he had overtaken Hitler's power. Goring was later stripped of his ranks and ordered to be executed in October of 1946, but would take his own life before he could be …show more content…
The fact that the story was told in first person was also a benefit because it gave an inside look on how the Nazis could change a person's feelings and beliefs. A weakness from the book was the bias aspect, because it only gave the story from the oppressed point of view and not the oppressor's.
"Hitler's Role in the Final Solution" was a good journal entry because it was an unbiased article that gave an overall insight of Hitler's role in the Final Solution from the standpoint of being on the outside looking in. The article also showed the planning and the structure of the events that took place in the book Night and Herman Goring: Hitler's Second-in-Command, such as the concentration camps and the mass executions through Europe. The only negative from the article was the fact that it never gave any information on the fall of Hitler, and what happened to the Final Solution when he
Eleven million lives were massacred in one of the world’s darkest moments attempting to create a perfect race. In 1942 Germany was losing World War II, Adolf Hitler 's final solution was to target the blame towards Europe 's Jewish population, gypsies, and homosexuals. Together Hitler and the Nazi regime gradually deprived the Jews, gypsies and homosexuals from their rights. Many people were brought to labor camps by train. The conditions in camps were inhumane.
“The Holocaust shows us how a combination of events and attitude can erode a society’s democratic beliefs.” -Tim Holden. These same attitudes are the ones of the German society that caused the ascent of Hitler, as well as the ascent of Hitler's insidious intentions for genocide. The book “Night” written by Elie Wiesel recounts the author's chilling story and the horrid details that explain his life inside one of Hitler's insidious death camps At the point when individuals hear the name Hitler, they quickly connect him with the mass genocide of millions of Jews.
On September 1, 1939 World War II began. Germany and the axis powers were trying to get Europe to be in Nazi control. With this came the wrath of Adolf Hitler. He believed the reason why Germany lost World War I and had a huge economic crisis was because of the Jewish population, the mentally ill, blacks, and gypsies. He believed the only way to cleanse the world and prevent that from happening again was to exterminate those people.
The novel Night is a terrifying story that reveals the horrors of the Holocaust. The author Elie Wiesel,winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize and a Holocaust survivor, published this award winning book in the year 1956. He wrote this novel to tell about his experiences with his father in the Nazi Germany concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944-1945. Now his word and his story has gotten to the public so now we all now know and understand the horror of the Holocaust.
"...to remain silent and indifferent is the greatest sin of all..." The Holocaust killed over 6-7 million people. Jews were forced to live in specific areas of the city called ghettos after the beginning of World War ll. In the larger ghettos, up to 1,000 people a day were picked up and brought by train to concentration camps or death camps. Elie Wiesel was a survivor in the Holocaust.
This was the hell that was run by the evil Germans, six millions of Jews sacrificed in it. Night, a terrifying account of the Nazi death camp written by Elie Wiesel, explores the inhumanity among people, the place family plays in terrible circumstances and the place hope plays in the Holocaust. Through Night, Elie Wiesel paints a depressing picture about the loss of humanity. The Germans were going to defeat, but Hitler made the promise that he will annihilate all the Jews before the clock strikes twelve. The German government and German society attempted to redefine Jews as sub-human, and then as creatures who deserved to die.
In the book “The Origins of the Final Solution” Christopher Browning discusses the argument to when the Nazis decided to commit genocide against the Jews and their reasons for doing so. Christopher Browning is a “moderate-functionalist” who believes that the plan of the Final solution was a progressive decision rather than something that was planned before the war began. By August of 1941 all factors were in place for the murder of all Jews in the Soviet Union. Intentionalists might argue that Hitler’s plan to destroy the Jews of the Soviet Union might have been a well thought out plan however, Browning argues how the term “final solution” did not mean the extermination of the Jews, it meant the deportation of the Jews. But only after the attack on the Soviet Union did the term change to the plan to exterminate the Jews.
Night Final Open Ended Question Night, written by Elie Wiesel, is a memoir about his life as he goes through the Holocaust. Eliezer goes through many situations that cause him, and other Jews, to be dehumanized by the Nazis. The three levels of dehumanization are physical, mental, and emotional. Eliezer was affected by all three. Never in his whole life did he imagine that this would happen to him or his family.
Decision Making by Elie in Night The decisions made by Elie Wiesel in the book Night both positively and negatively impacted his life. These were decisions that the author thought were best for him or for his mother, sister and father. However, the particular decisions made by the boy in Night affected his identity, innocence, and significantly changed his view of life during his experience in the holocaust.
Fear is Destructive Fear causes people to makes judgements. It’s what makes people cautious and skittish, mostly in unsafe situations. Without fear people’s life would be at risk. Throughout the memoir Night fear builds up over time, starting when the Germans taking over Sighet, they slowly start to take over their lives.
Inhumanity and Cruelty in Night Adolf Hitler, the Nazi dictator of Germany, conducted a genocide known as the Holocaust during World War II that was intended to exterminate the Jewish population. The Holocaust was responsible for the death of about 6 million Jews. Night is a nonfiction novel written by Eliezer Wiesel about his experience during the Holocaust. Many events in the novel convey a theme of “man’s inhumanity to man”. The prisoners of the concentration camps are constantly tortured and neglected by the German officers who run the camps.
The human condition is a very malleable idea that is constantly changing due to the current state of mankind. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, the concept of the human condition is displayed in the worst sense of the concept, during the Holocaust of WWII. During this time, multiple groups of people, most notably European Jews, were persecuted against and sent to horrible hard labor and killing centers such as Auschwitz. In this memoir, Wiesel uses complex figurative language such as similes and metaphors to display the theme that a person’s state as a human, both at a physical and emotional level, can be altered to extreme lengths, and even taken away from them, under the most extreme conditions.
Elie Wiesel’s Night should not be banned from the book list for ninth grade because it is a book that teaches very important lessons despite the fact that it contains violent scenes. The book shows that we should treat people in a good way even if they are not like us. It reveals the horrible consequences of inhumanity, the meaningless suffering and unbearable pain of innocent people. These reasons show that the book is very important for the grown-ups because it deals with fundamental questions about humanity and moral values.
In Night, Elie Wiesel describes the Holocaust in a way to ensure that this type of history should not repeat itself. The Holocaust was a genocide of the European Jews that lasted between the years of 1933-1945. Night is a story of young Jewish boy who suffered the agony of the German Nazi’s concentration camps. He knew that if he where to survive this horrific period of his life, that he would make sure the world knew what really happened behind the electrified fences of those camps. Elie uses detailed words to create imagery that establishes the tone and the whole purpose of his story about what happened to the Jews in concentration camps.
The theme of dehumanization is scattered throughout the traumatic and horrific events that the Jews endured while prisoners in Auschwitz. The novel, Night, was written by Elie Wiesel in the mid 1950’s. Night describes the concentration camps where the tyrant Nazis oppressed the Jewish citizens. Night was written in first person and recounted the horrid details and conditions as a prisoner in the concentrations camps. Wiesel began writing after a 10-year self-imposed vow of silence about the tragic Holocaust.